Episodes
Monday May 01, 2023
Ian Lockwood: Thoughts From an Engineer
Monday May 01, 2023
Monday May 01, 2023
How should engineers be thinking about building wealth in communities?
That’s just one of the questions Chuck Marohn asks of Ian Lockwood, a recognized national leader in sustainable transportation policy and urban design. Lockwood is currently a livable transportation engineer for Toole Design, an engineering firm which works to build safer and more walkable streets. On this Strong Towns Podcast, join Marohn and Lockwood as they talk about the work of Toole Design, complete streets, and more.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
Monday Apr 03, 2023
What’s Going On With the Recent Bank Failures?
Monday Apr 03, 2023
Monday Apr 03, 2023
In March 2023, major banks collapsed, interest rates have been rising, and many people are greatly—and rightly—concerned about inflation. In this week’s episode of the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck Marohn talks about the financial system, and provides insights on what’s currently happening in the banking industry.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
Monday Mar 20, 2023
Growth Through Destruction
Monday Mar 20, 2023
Monday Mar 20, 2023
In 1906, a powerful earthquake in San Francisco, California, damaged a good portion of the city, causing havoc and distress as 28,188 buildings were destroyed, and over 3,000 people were killed. Curiously, after this tragic disaster, things began to grow again, but this time the built environment came back stronger. Seth Zeren, a founding member of Strong Towns, wrote about this phenomenon last month, and this week on the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck Marohn and Zeren chat about complexity, and if complex systems can grow stronger through destruction.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
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“Do Things Need to Burn for New Things to Grow?” by Seth Zeren, Strong Towns (Feb, 2023).
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Subscribe to Seth Zeren’s Substack, Build the Next Right Thing.
Monday Mar 13, 2023
On the Conservative Reaction to 15-Minute Cities
Monday Mar 13, 2023
Monday Mar 13, 2023
We believe everyone can build a Strong Town, but all too often, political differences divide communities, and instead of working together to build stronger neighborhoods from a bottom-up approach, we get caught up in contentious, top-down ideas and conversations.
One such political divide has developed around the concept of the 15-minute city: a term used to describe traditional neighborhoods. While to urbanists it describes a walkable place, to critics, it’s a potential infringement on personal freedoms. In this episode of the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck Marohn dives into the controversies surrounding the 15-minute city.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
Monday Feb 20, 2023
The Property Tax System is Broken—Regrid Works on Tools to Help Fix It
Monday Feb 20, 2023
Monday Feb 20, 2023
The property tax system is broken all across the nation. In Detroit, residents face an issue of inconsistent assessments, where two homes that are similar in condition and sitting on similar-sized lots have widely different assessment scores.
Recently, the team at Regrid, an industry-leading property data and location intelligence company, put together an Assessment Gauge map that may prove to be a useful tool for homeowners, assessors, or nonprofits in bringing a much-needed balance to overassessments.
Today on the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck Marohn welcomes back Alex Alsup, vice president of research and development at Regrid, to talk about assessments and property tax in Detroit, how the Strong Towns approach worked for Alsup and his team, and an overview of the assessment process.
Read more about the Assessment Gauge in the article “Check Your Temperature- You Might Have an Assessment Fever.” To learn more about Regrid or get access to their parcel data, click here.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
Monday Feb 13, 2023
Jeff Speck on the 10th-Anniversary Edition of Walkable City
Monday Feb 13, 2023
Monday Feb 13, 2023
Today on the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck Marohn welcomes back Jeff Speck, city planner and author, to talk about a brand-new version of his book, Walkable City: How Downtown Can Save America, One Step at a Time.
It’s the 10th anniversary for the book, and a lot has changed in the U.S. since the original was published. While the content from the first edition is still relevant today, this updated version holds over 100 pages of new information useful to those actively working to make their cities stronger. Listen to Chuck and Speck talk in depth about some of those book additions, including (but not limited to) COVID’s impact on cities, the reckless driver narrative, and a simple truth about street trees.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
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Get the new edition of Walkable City: How Downtown Can Save America, One Step at a Time.
Monday Jan 30, 2023
Monday Jan 30, 2023
Anyone should be able to speak up and question whether current engineering practices truly benefit our communities. That’s especially true for licensed professionals who have a special duty to the public to be heard. And when they do speak up, their statements should not make them a target for licensing boards.
Members of the Minnesota board of engineering licensure are supposed to uphold the integrity of their institution, but instead they have abused their power, overstepping their authority in order to slander a leading reformer—someone who was not even practicing engineering—by issuing a state order against Strong Towns founder and president, Charles Marohn.
We’re fighting to have the board’s decision overturned. In this Strong Towns Podcast, listen to the latest update on the appeal for this case and the oral arguments made in front of the Minnesota Court of Appeals.
For more information on this case, visit www.strongtowns.org/supportreform.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
- Learn more about our fight for engineering reform.
- Charles Marohn (Twitter).
Monday Jan 09, 2023
Mike Hathorne: Where Does Decision-Making Need to Occur in Our Communities?
Monday Jan 09, 2023
Monday Jan 09, 2023
How far up the chain of command does a problem need to go before someone can make a decision on it? According to the concept of subsidiarity, it matters less what decision is made and more who makes the decision—in other words, a decision should be made at the lowest level that it can competently be made.
Mike Hathorne, principal of community planning and design at Commun1ty.one and Strong Towns member, works with cities to create decision-making processes that can impact how our places function. Today, he joins Chuck Marohn on the Strong Towns Podcast to discuss subsidiarity in a practical sense.
For further listening on this topic, check out the episode “What Customer Service Should Mean for a City,” where Chuck talks about his personal experience with subsidiarity and how it forms in our places.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
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“Subsidiarity,” by Mike Hathorne, Commun1ity.one (August 2018).
Monday Jan 02, 2023
Ben Hunt: In Praise of Bitcoin
Monday Jan 02, 2023
Monday Jan 02, 2023
Today’s Strong Towns Podcast guest, Ben Hunt, wrote on Epsilon Theory that “Bitcoin has been an authentic expression of identity, a positive identity of autonomy, entrepreneurialism, and resistance to the Nudging State and the Nudging Oligarchy.”
Today, join Chuck Marohn as he invites Hunt onto the podcast to discuss his insights on Bitcoin, the story of investing, and how it connects to all of us.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES
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“In Praise of Bitcoin,” by Ben Hunt, Epsilon Theory (April 2021).
Monday Dec 19, 2022
Thanks for a Great Year
Monday Dec 19, 2022
Monday Dec 19, 2022
It's been a great year for the Strong Towns Podcast; thanks for listening. We wanted to close out 2022 with one last message, and to wish you Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year!